The Ahfad journal
Volume 9, Issue 2, 1992, Pages 37-60

Impacts of male outmigration on women: a case study of Kutum / Northern Darfur / Sudan. (Article)

Grawert E.*
  • a [Affiliation not available]

Abstract

This case study of 313 households in the Kutum area in Western Sudan focuses on female headed households with migrant husbands. Free leases of land by women were common. 65% of the sample owned fields, and over 50% had home gardens in town. Among villagers 94% owned fields, and 74% had additional gardens. 28.3% of town owners of fields or gardens employed seasonal wage laborers, of whom 33% were female workers. None of the villages hired agricultural laborers. Labor shortages appeared only during weeding times. Fields were cultivated and housing was repaired mostly by unpaid female labor: a gender-specified role. Strategies for preventing poverty included cash crop cultivation, petty trade, sales of property, seasonal wage labor, and migration. The number of agricultural wage workers increased during famines. Findings show that 69 men migrated to Arab countries and 35 to other areas outside Darfur. 62.5% of the 115 migrants were married, and 20.8% did not send remittances home after more than a 6 months absence. 46.5% of unmarried migrants did not send remittances. 15.6% of the 77 rural women were dissatisfied with remittances. 21.5% of 121 migrants were away for more than a year; 66.1% were away 2-5 years. 12.4% were gone for more than 5 years. Irregular remittances were attributed to high urban living costs, to irregular means of sending money, and to saving for a family chaperone. Remittances satisfied immediate consumption needs. Outmigration was not really a survival strategy but an anti-destitution measure. Higher wage rates were not considered a primary motive for outmigration. Under drought conditions strategies included development of gardening for food and cash production. Out migration resulted in female household heads, in the need for cash income for supplementary items, in an increased work load including the men's activities, in women as the main food producers and thus more subject to environmental effects, and in overwork, which reduced input in children's education and domestic tasks. 37% of El-Tahir women with migrating spouses had trouble meeting basic needs, 25.6% had shortages of family labor, and 17.4% had difficulty with child rearing. Migrants' wives who were separated from extended families suffered from loss of social prestige and income. Women regardless of class or educational level were considered inferior to men. Women's influence was at the individual, household, and informal group level.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

Female Role Interpersonal Relations economics population demography developing country Population Dynamics Households Developing Countries Family And Household Middle East rural population Agriculture gender issues Arab Countries economic conditions family size Family Characteristics human relation health care manpower Health Manpower Head Of Household--women Agricultural Workers--women Labor Migration--men Behavior Africa Northern Africa Article Africa, Northern migration population and population related phenomena Demographic Factors Emigration and Immigration Economic Factors Transients and Migrants Population Characteristics Human Resources Macroeconomic Factors employment Labor Force social behavior Sudan

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0027106470&partnerID=40&md5=d41b2287b3d3f1a39c8a460add7c0023

ISSN: 02554070
Cited by: 6
Original Language: English